The mother of the woman said to have been victimized by three police officers during a vicious custody battle said her daughter became so stressed by being followed "every day, all day" that she considered suicide.

Having spent the past three weeks recovering at home after suffering a seizure, embattled Calgary Centre MP Kent Hehr says he used the time to reflect on the #MeToo movement and accusations that forced him to step down as minister of sport and persons with disabilities.

The retiring CEO of Pengrowth Energy Corp. says Canadian oil and gas leaders have been too "shy" to speak out in support of their industry and he plans to help fill that vacuum as he leaves the job he's held since 2009.

Developmentally disabled artists got out of the Fairview Arena with only about an hour to spare before part of the roof collapsed Tuesday afternoon, and the executive director is wondering what happened.

Margaret Bell says she gets goosebumps thinking about how she hauled a drowning man out of the Glenmore Reservoir last summer. She's just one of the 22 Calgarians being recognized by the fire department for going above and beyond in emergency situations.

The Alberta government placed full-page newspaper advertisements in British Columbia newspapers Wednesday that tout the provinces’ shared goals on climate change and jobs, the latest tactic in a campaign to get the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion built to the Pacific coast.

A southern Alberta First Nation says Canada continues to inflict historical wrongs on Indigenous communities by placing Indigenous children in white homes, pointing to a child custody battle now before the courts.

Police have hired a U.S. DNA technology firm to create a sketch of the possible likeness of the mother of a baby found dead in a Calgary dumpster on Christmas Eve, as investigators continue in their efforts to find her.

While many Saskatchewan and Alberta residents struggle to find employment, data released by Statistics Canada suggests there are opportunities in management, health, and science sectors — and these jobs are taking a long time to be filled.

"The job of a public broadcaster is to take the data available and explain it, to help Albertans understand the context of this moment, and understand one another." CBC Calgary partners with pollster to chart the political motivations in Alberta, more than a year away from the next provincial election.